It appears that the State of Colorado
could possibly become the "Florida" of the Election of 2004 due to Proposition
36, a measure that would amend the State's constitution by making Colorado
the third State to apportion its electoral votes, giving 5 votes to
the winner of the 2004 balloting while giving the loser a consolation
prize of four votes�and perhaps the election.

What makes Proposition 36, also known
as Amendment 36, dicey are two things. First, the measure that could
amend the State Constitution was not passed by 60% of the members of
the GOP-controlled State Assembly and Senate. Nor was it the result
of what would be a Republican-dominated State constitutional convention.
It was the result of an out-of-state, liberal, anti-Electoral College
advocacy group that called itself People's Choice for President.
The group initiated a petition drive in Colorado as Make Your Vote
Count, and collected enough signatures to force the measure on the
ballot. Second, if Amendment 36 is enacted, it contains a retroactive
feature that mandates the division of electors apply to the ballots
cast on Nov. 2, 2004�a clear violation of the Electoral Count Act
of 1887 that was at the heart of the Florida electoral dispute in
2000 and was the basis for the U.S. Supreme Court ruling that
ended the recasting of votes in Florida and placed Texas Gov. George
W. Bush in the White House. It violated federal law since the Electoral
Count Act of 1887 requires that the awarding of the votes be based on
whatever laws were in effect at the moment the first vote is cast on
election day. Since Amendment 36 will still be nothing more than
an issue on the ballot when the first votes are cast, splitting electors
will not be law when those votes are cast. The measure will only become
law when the votes are counted�providing enough voters cast their ballots
to make it law.

However, the rules that are in place
when the first vote is cast in a presidential contest (according to
the US Supreme Court in Bush v Gore�based on the Electoral
Count Act of 1887) are the rules that will govern the entire contest
during that election cycle. When the first vote is cast in the Election
of 2004 in the State of Colorado, the winner of that contest will
have technically been promised all nine of the State's electoral votes
since that will have been the rule in effect when that vote was cast.
The legal question that will be raised in a close race in which only
a couple of electoral votes separate George W. Bush and John F. Kerry
is whether a constitutional amendment, enacted in the closing minutes
of that vote, can alter the status of the electors that existed when
the first vote was cast. The legal precedent was firmly established
in Bush v Gore. Should this race end up in another photo finish election,
Bush v Kerry or Kerry v Bush will end up in the US Supreme Court�or,
if the Kerry people have their way, in the World Court in the Hague.

In the Election of 2000, Al Gore
had 268 electoral votes in hand when the Florida dispute occurred. Had
Colorado been a State that apportioned its electors�even though Bush
overwhelmingly won Colorado with a margin of over 143 thousand votes�Gore
would have received four of Colorado's nine electoral votes�and the
White House, with Florida's 25 electoral votes becoming meaningless.
The final electoral vote count tally would have flip-flopped, with Gore
gaining 271 votes, and Bush ending up with 267.

A completely unknown advocacy group,
People's Choice for President showed up in Colorado as Make Your
Vote Count after its founder, Brazilian educator J. Jorge Klor de
Alvia and an unidentified secret "donor" who is trying to legalize
marijuana in the United States (Czech socialist George Soros?)
coughed up slightly over $1 million to finance a drive in that State
to change the manner in which its electors are awarded in presidential
elections. Klor de Alvia, who is purportedly now an American
citizen who lives in California, is the president of a Brazilian university�Faculdare
Pitagoras. He is also the president of Apollo International,
Inc., a Phoenix, Arizona based global education company that is
part of Apollo Group, Inc. which owns the online University
of Phoenix. He is also a former instructor at Princeton University.
Klor de Alvia contributed $410 thousand to steal four electoral
votes from George W. Bush in Colorado. The "secret" donor who
is trying to legalize marijuana in the United States contributed approximately
$500 thousand. Other liberal donors coughed up the remaining $100 thousand
that was used to brainwash the voters of Colorado that their votes will
be lost if the electoral votes are not proportionally divided.

Colorado was specifically chosen
for several reason. First, Colorado is one of only a handful of States
that almost always votes Republican. The times the State has cast its
electoral votes for a Democratic presidential candidate in the 20th
century can be counted on one hand. (One of those times was in 1992
when Colorado gave their nine electors to Gov. Bill Clinton.
In 1996, they changed their mind and gave their votes to Sen. Bob
Dole.)

Colorado is "in play" this year due
to the battle to gain the US Senate seat of retiring GOP senator Ben
Nighthorse Campbell. The battle pits popular Democratic State Attorney
General Ken Salazar against beer tycoon Pete Coors. Salazar
is the odds-on favorite to win the race, with polls showing him leading
Coors 51% to 49%�the same percentage that favors the passage of Amendment
36. Not even popular Republican Gov. Bill Owens has been
able to stem the tide with his own voter initiative called Coloradans
Against a Really Stupid Idea

But most important in the reasoning
of People's Choice and Make Your Vote Count that they could win
in Colorado was a 1996 change in the State's constitution that was ostensibly
designed to make it more difficult to enact a constitutional amendment�by
the legislature. But a Trojan Horse was inserted in the bill that would
allow any citizen's group to propose an amendment to the State constitution�if
they could generate a petition containing signatures of registered voters
equal to 5% of whatever vote was cast for the Secretary of State
of Colorado in the previous election�and have the financial means
to sell their amendment to the voters through advertising and political
talking heads on radio and TV who would use smoke and mirrors to convince
the voters that if the electoral votes are not divided, then the votes
of those who cast their ballot for the opposition no longer count.

In 1996, when the Colorado legislature
changed the manner in which constitutional amendments were enacted,
they were ratified by a simple majority vote. In a Republican stronghold
like Colorado, that meant Republicans could amend the Constitution without
too much interference from Democrats. (Republicans hold 37 seats in
the State Assembly. Democrats hold 28. Eighteen State senators are Republicans
and 17 are Democrats. Politically, 36% of the state's registered voters
are Republicans, 30% are Democrat, and 32% are Independents who are
fiscal conservatives who generally vote with the Republicans.)

The provision, added to the Constitution
in 1996 read: "...Proposed amendments to the constitution may be
placed on the ballot by the legislature (referendum), by citizen petition
(the initiative) ...[requiring] signatures of registered voters equal
to five percent of the votes cast for the office of Secretary of State
at the last election, currently 54,242 signatures." The People's
Choice for President petitioners collected 67,799 signatures. Twenty
percent of them, according to People's Choice and Make Your Vote
Count, came from registered Republicans who don't understand how
the President is elected�and why.

The Trojan Horse allowed the liberals
to create their own constitutional amendment�but one that would be technically
unconstitutional according to Bush v Gore and the Electoral
Count Act of 1887, since it would violate the rights and expectations
of the candidates seeking those electoral votes at the time the balloting
commenced by making the amendment retroactive. Based on Bush v Gore,
the US Supreme Court ruled that presidential elections must be
decided based on the rules in effect when the first vote is cast.

What gripes me about Colorado
Amendment 36 is that it was not orchestrated to give a national voice
to the votes of the losers in Colorado's election, nor was it placed
on the ballot because of the lofty utopian aspirations of the anti-Electoral
College crowd who honestly believe that the president should be elected
based exclusively on the popular vote (which means the large, union-controlled
northeastern and Midwestern industrial States and California will always
elect the President of the United States�who will always be a liberal
Democrat). The plan in Colorado was carefully devised and craftily schemed
specifically to give John F. Kerry four electoral votes in the Election
of 2004 he can't win any other way. If this election becomes a cliffhanger,
Colorado�a State that has never been considered a battleground State�could
likely decide the Election of 2004 for Kerry even though
Bush will win the State's popular majority.

Jon Christian Ryter is the pseudonym of a
former newspaper reporter with the Parkersburg, WV Sentinel. He authored
a syndicated newspaper column, Answers From The Bible, from the mid-1970s
until 1985. Answers From The Bible was read weekly in many suburban
markets in the United States.

Today, Jon is an advertising
executive with the Washington Times. His website, www.jonchristianryter.com
has helped him establish a network of mid-to senior-level Washington
insiders who now provide him with a steady stream of material for
use both in his books and in the investigative reports that are found
on his website. E-Mail: BAFFauthor@aol.com